Kartiikeya
Kartiikeya

Reputation: 2516

mask all digits except first 6 and last 4 digits of a string( length varies )

I have a card number as a string, for example:

string  ClsCommon.str_CardNumbe r = "3456123434561234";

The length of this card number can vary from 16 to 19 digits, depending on the requirement.

My requirement is that I have to show the first six digits and the last 4 digits of a card number and mask the other characters in between with the character 'X'.

I have tried using subString and implemented it separately for 16,17,18,19 digits..

I split string(ClsCommon.str_CardNumber) to 5 strings (str_cardNum1, str_cardNum2, str_cardNum3, str_cardNum4, str_cardNum5 - 4 digits for each string..remaining digits for 5th string)

All the strings are placed in ClsCommon file. Based on that I implemented the below, which works perfectly:

if (ClsCommon.str_CardNumber.Length == 16) {
    txtmskcrdnum.Text = string.Concat(ClsCommon.str_cardNum1, " ", ClsCommon.str_cardNum2.Substring(0, 2), "XX", " ", "XXXX", " ", ClsCommon.str_cardNum4);

}
if (ClsCommon.str_CardNumber.Length == 17) {
    txtmskcrdnum.Text = string.Concat(ClsCommon.str_cardNum1, " ", ClsCommon.str_cardNum2.Substring(0, 2), "XX", " ", "XXXX", " ", "X", ClsCommon.str_cardNum4.Substring(1, 3), " ", ClsCommon.str_cardNum5);
}
if (ClsCommon.str_CardNumber.Length == 18) {
    txtmskcrdnum.Text = string.Concat(ClsCommon.str_cardNum1, " ", ClsCommon.str_cardNum2.Substring(0, 2), "XX", " ", "XXXX", " ", "XX", ClsCommon.str_cardNum4.Substring(2, 2), " ", ClsCommon.str_cardNum5);
}


if (ClsCommon.str_CardNumber.Length == 19) {
    txtmskcrdnum.Text = string.Concat(ClsCommon.str_cardNum1, " ", ClsCommon.str_cardNum2.Substring(0, 2), "XX", " ", "XXXX", " ", "XXX", ClsCommon.str_cardNum4.Substring(3, 1), " ", ClsCommon.str_cardNum5);
}
txtmskcrdnum.Text = ClsCommon.str_CardNumber.PadLeft(ClsCommon.str_CardNumber.Length, 'X').Substring(ClsCommon.str_CardNumber.Length - 4);

For multiple lengths, the above approach is not useful.

I want a single approach which displays the first 6 and last 4 digits and masks other digits with X. The final string should have a space between every 4 digits.

Upvotes: 24

Views: 68209

Answers (13)

Yura  Zagoruyko
Yura Zagoruyko

Reputation: 21

"3456123434561234".replace(/\D/g, '').replace(/^(.{6})(.+)(.{4})$/g, '$1******$3');
>'345612******1234'
"3456-1234-3456-1234".replace(/\D/g, '').replace(/^(.{6})(.+)(.{4})$/g, '$1******$3');
>'345612******1234'
"3456 1234 3456 1234".replace(/\D/g, '').replace(/^(.{6})(.+)(.{4})$/g, '$1******$3');
>'345612******1234'

Upvotes: 0

Collins A. Eban
Collins A. Eban

Reputation: 21

The better way to do it is by using string format as seen below:

YourData = string.Format("************{0}", YourData.Trim().Substring(12, 4));

Upvotes: 0

Ajay2707
Ajay2707

Reputation: 5798

I think this one is the simplest form. PadLeft/PadRight did not help me. I don't know and not found in the suggested list, but Right function is not in asp.net core c# code.

Suppose I have credit card no( "2512920040512345") and mask all digit except last 4 digit ("XXXXXXXXXXXX2345").

//C# code will give you the desired output. Replace the string with your CreditCardno variable
new string('X', "2512920040512345".Length-4)+ "2512920040512345".Substring( "2512920040512345".Length-4, 4)

Upvotes: 1

str.substring(0, 5) +
                str.substring(5, str.length() - 3)
                .replaceAll("[\\d]", "x") +
                str.substring(str.length() - 3, str.length());

//Here is the simple way to do

Upvotes: 0

Dimitris Laliotis
Dimitris Laliotis

Reputation: 83

Linq saves coding lines, small code snippet.

Replaces with (*) char above 6 and bellow CardPan length minus 4

var CardPan = "1234567890123456";
var maskedPan = CardPan.Aggregate(string.Empty, (value, next) =>
{
    if (value.Length >= 6 && value.Length < CardPan.Length - 4)
    {
        next = '*';
    }
    return value + next;
});

Upvotes: 1

jmvtrinidad
jmvtrinidad

Reputation: 3658

Try this one. Simple and straight forward.

public static class StringExtensions
{
    public static string Masked(this string source, int start, int count)
    {
        return source.Masked('x', start, count);
    }

    public static string Masked(this string source, char maskValue, int start, int count)
    {
        var firstPart = source.Substring(0, start);
        var lastPart = source.Substring(start + count);
        var middlePart = new string(maskValue, count);

        return firstPart + middlePart + lastPart;
    }
}

Upvotes: 5

David Votrubec
David Votrubec

Reputation: 4156

I would do something like this (pseudo C# - take as rough idea to build upon).

Untested code ahead...

string MaskDigits(string input)
{
    //take first 6 characters
    string firstPart = input.Substring(0, 6);

    //take last 4 characters
    int len = input.Length;
    string lastPart = input.Substring(len - 4, 4);

    //take the middle part (XXXXXXXXX)
    int middlePartLenght = input.Substring(6, len - 4).Count();
    string middlePart = new String('X', 5);

    return firstPart + middlePart + lastPart;
}

Upvotes: 4

Ted James
Ted James

Reputation: 121

I'm sure there is a cleaner way to do this:

int currentChar = 0;
string maskable = "11111144441111";

string masked = maskable;
int length = masked.Length;

int startMaskPoint = 6;
int endMaskPoint = length - 4 - startMaskPoint;

masked = masked.Remove(startMaskPoint, endMaskPoint);

int numRemoved = length - masked.Length;
string Mask = "";
while (numRemoved != 0)
{
    Mask = Mask + "#";
    numRemoved--;
}

masked = masked.Insert(startMaskPoint, Mask);
string returnableString = masked;
while (length > 4)
{
    returnableString = returnableString.Insert(currentChar + 4, " ");
    currentChar = currentChar + 5;
    length = length - 4;
}

Upvotes: 1

Little Helper
Little Helper

Reputation: 2026

Many of the given solutions parse the input multiple times. Below I present a solution that parses the input only once. But I have no experience in C#, so the function is written in Scheme.

The function is divided into two:

(1) visit-first-6 parses the first six characters and concatenates them to the rest of the computation. When visit-first-6 has parsed the first six characters, it calls visit-rest.

(2) visit-rest exploits the fact that we can delay some computation until we have gained more knowledge. In this case, we wait to determine whether the element in the list should be shown until we know how many characters are left.

(define (mask xs)
  (letrec ([visit-first-6 (lambda (xs chars-parsed)
                            (cond
                              [(null? xs)
                               ;; Shorter than 6 characters.
                               '()]
                              [(< chars-parsed 6)
                               ;; Still parsing the first 6 characters
                               (cons (car xs)
                                     (visit-first-6 (cdr xs)
                                                    (1+ chars-parsed)))]
                              [else
                               ;; The first 6 characters have been parsed.
                               (visit-rest xs
                                           (lambda (ys chars-left)
                                             ys))]))]
           [visit-rest (lambda (xs k)
                         (if (null? xs)
                             ;; End of input
                             (k '() 0)
                             ;; Parsing rest of the input
                             (visit-rest (cdr xs)
                                         (lambda (rest chars-left)
                                           (if (< chars-left 4)
                                               ;; Show the last 4 characters
                                               (k (cons (car xs) rest)
                                                  (1+ chars-left))
                                               ;; Don't show the middle characters
                                               (k (cons "X"
                                                        rest)
                                                  (1+ chars-left)))))))])
    (visit-first-6 xs
                   0)))

Running mask in the Petite Chez Scheme interpreter

> (mask '(1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18))
(1 2 3 4 5 6 "X" "X" "X" "X" "X" "X" "X" "X" 15 16 17 18)
> (mask '())
()
> (mask '(1 2 3 4))
(1 2 3 4)
> (mask '(1 2 3 4 5))
(1 2 3 4 5)
> (mask '(1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9))
(1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9)
> (mask '(1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10))
(1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10)
> (mask '(1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11))
(1 2 3 4 5 6 "X" 8 9 10 11)

NB. I saw this as a funny exercise and I figured I might as well share it. Yannick Meeus has already provided an easily understandable solution. So, this only serves for the interested.

Upvotes: 0

WizLiz
WizLiz

Reputation: 2098

How about replacing a specific matched group using Regex :

        string cardNumber = "3456123434561234";
        var pattern = "^(.{6})(.+)(.{4})$";
        var maskedNumber = Regex.Replace(cardNumber, pattern, (match) =>
        {
           return Regex.Replace(String.Format("{0}{1}{2}",
           match.Groups[1].Value, // the first 6 digits
           new String('X', match.Groups[2].Value.Length), // X times the 'X' char
           match.Groups[3].Value) /*the last 4 digits*/,".{4}", "$0 "); //finally add a separator every 4 char
        });

Upvotes: 1

Alex K.
Alex K.

Reputation: 175826

One method:

string masked = null;
for (int i = 0; i < str_CardNumber.Length; i++) {
    masked += (i > 5 && i < str_CardNumber.Length - 4) ? 'X' : str_CardNumber[i];
    if ((i + 1) % 4 == 0)
        masked += " ";
}

Upvotes: 1

Dmitrii Bychenko
Dmitrii Bychenko

Reputation: 186748

Possible implementation (acccepts varios formats e.g. numbers can be divided into groups etc.):

private static String MaskedNumber(String source) {
  StringBuilder sb = new StringBuilder(source);

  const int skipLeft = 6;
  const int skipRight = 4;

  int left = -1;

  for (int i = 0, c = 0; i < sb.Length; ++i) {
    if (Char.IsDigit(sb[i])) {
      c += 1;

      if (c > skipLeft) {
        left = i;

        break;
      }
    }
  }

  for (int i = sb.Length - 1, c = 0; i >= left; --i)
    if (Char.IsDigit(sb[i])) {
      c += 1;

      if (c > skipRight)
        sb[i] = 'X';
    }

  return sb.ToString();
}

// Tests 

  // 3456-12XX-XXXX-1234
  Console.Write(MaskedNumber("3456-1234-3456-1234"));
  // 3456123XXXXX1234
  Console.Write(MaskedNumber("3456123434561234"));

this implementation just masks the digits and preserve the format.

Upvotes: 1

Yannick Meeus
Yannick Meeus

Reputation: 5900

This will work with any card number length:

var cardNumber = "3456123434561234";

var firstDigits = cardNumber.Substring(0, 6);
var lastDigits = cardNumber.Substring(cardNumber.Length - 4, 4);

var requiredMask = new String('X', cardNumber.Length - firstDigits.Length - lastDigits.Length);

var maskedString = string.Concat(firstDigits, requiredMask, lastDigits);
var maskedCardNumberWithSpaces = Regex.Replace(maskedString, ".{4}", "$0 ");

Upvotes: 40

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